An experiment in hypertextual
relationships by Karla Tonella of the University of Iowa that explores the
common ground between Cyorgs, Gender, LesBiGay, Dispora, La Frontera, Border
Incidents and Other Borders.

Created by Susana
Gallardo, a doctoral candidate in the department of Religious Studies at
Stanford University. A deserving winner of the "Lycos Top 5% of the Web"
award. Chock full of substantive content and valuable resources. This site
keeps its eye on other online news and magazine sites for stories on Chicanas
-- from basketball players to an index of professors. That's the front page.
Inside you will find poetry, literature, biographies and many more links
to resources and other Chicana sites.

"I should explain
why I --an already burdened feminist graduate student with multiple 'zines,
articles, and other media projects in both development & production--
felt inordinately compelled to pick up the gauntlet and tackle this Xenian
task (yes, I am a rabid Xena fan): I got annoyed. That is, I got exceedingly
irritated trying to find rad Asian/American women's work on the web and
figured everybody else must be sick of it too."

Despite the title,
the main subject of this document is not frequently-asked questions about
gender-free pronouns, but instead is a general information source about
gender-free alternatives to gendered pronouns.

A frequently-updated,
annotated listing of new and changed web sites offering information on women
of particular use to educators and students. This site provides updates
to Joan Korenman's book Internet Resources on Women: Using Electronic
Media in Curriculum Transformation.

H-MINERVA is the H-Net
discussion list devoted to the study of women and war and women in the military,
worldwide and in all historical areas. Discussions are frequently about
current events regarding women in and in relation to the military as well.
Linked to The Minerva Center, an educational foundation and publisher of
related books.

The Vatican text of
the papal letter to women issued in preparation for the Beijing Conference.
It is dated June 29 and released July 10 at the Vatican. (It's presence
here should not, by any means, be considered an endorsment of its contents,
the writer or the church.)

In addition to rounding
up all the usual suspects, Jane Sloan and her collegues provide an excellent
selection of Reference Tools organized by archives, bibliographies, directories,
encyclopedic sites etc.

A site by Anacaona Makandal, is
more bibliography than webliography at the moment, but I expect that will
change over time. Categories: General, Art, Feminist Theory & Criticism,
Film, Labour and Slavery, Lesbian and Bisexual, Literature, Music, Reproductive
Rights and Women in Development.

Modem delivered instruction
in the following areas: (a) technological skills: courses that specifically
teach and train women in the use of the computer and related technologies
(b) living skills: health and wellness, parenting and caretaking, economic
literacy, dealing with violence, agricultural knowledge.. (c)academic courses:
writing and critical thinking, women's studies, social and political science,
languages, literature, theology. Emphasis on courses that promote social
analysis, communication and global awareness. (d)continuing education for
workers and professionals: medical and social services, information science,
business and leadership skills.

"The Research Libraries
of The New York Public Library are one of the most important resource centers
for Women's Studies in the United States. In addition to vast retrospective
holdings relating to women, including manuscript and archival material,
NYPL has a strong collection of current Women's Studies materials."

The University of
Maryland Baltimore County maintains two very useful pages of women's studies
pointers. One offers an alphabetical list of over 500 selected women's and
gender related sites of all types. To make the list easier to navigate,
it has also been divided by topic, including activism, arts and humanities,
health, international, net info, science/technology, and sexuality, as well
as a separate list pointing to over 450 national and international university
women's studies programs and research centers. The second page provides
an annotated collection of over 500 women's issues and gender studies email
lists.

Specialized Search Engines

The most comprehensive
site for academic women's studies resources, including syllabi,
papers, film reviews, bibliographies, links to women's studies
departments, the best compilation of women/gender/feminist/male
studies listservs. Hosted
by the University of Maryland.

Possibly the largest index of
links to resources for and about women. Includes listings for
content for women in arts, business, education, health,
history, sports and more! Also includes random site selector,
featured women profiles, and forum areas. Some feminist sites
are purposely ignored because the sponsors want a "more
corporate look."

One of the resources left out
of WWWomen because it is "a hotlist of feminist oriented links"
It's stated purpose is "to provide women with a comprehensive,
searchable directory of links to female-friendly sites and
information on the World Wide Web."